OTHER, VIEWS Purim In Dachau oft, ealtatuty age4 ' 94 c(4 iltei fate Ettei pace id (/ vi4ge. eAgAV.4, 4606-ptedotti Aga ad pte4104 iftettif fugit tapaotti Eliev &maim 14 a tutique dehipt mate fele tutifite uttmailit. SATURDAY, MARCH 22ND lomir shpilen a Purim shpir the Rabbi." We never found "Fellow Jews, what is the out whether he was actually a matter with you?! Today is rabbi, but he always washed his Purim, let us play a Purim brachah hands and made a Shpiel!" (blessing) before eating. From Then it dawned on us that time to time when the back home, a million years Germans were not looking, he ago, this was the time of the would invite us to participate SO LLY year when we children were in the evening prayers. GAN OR dressing up for Purim, playing Our Jewish camp command- Spe cial and eating hamantashen. It er, Burgin, heard about him Comm entary took the "Rabbi" to remember and tried to get him easier the exact date by the Jewish jobs. Most people died when they had to carry a hundred pounds of calendar when Purim Was. He then divided the roles of Ester cement sacks on their backs or other Hamalka (the queen), Mordechai, chores of heavy labor. Vashti and Haman among the onlook- Around the middle of March, we ers. I was honored to receive the role were given a day off. It was a Sunday. of Mordechai, and we all ended up The camp was covered with snow, dancing in the snow. And so we had but here and there the first signs of our Purim Shpiel in Dachau. spring were in the air. We heard vague But that was not the end of the story. rumors of the American break through The "Rabbi" promised us that we will get into Germany and a glimmer of hope today our shalach manot and we thought was kindled in our hearts. that it was hardly likely to happen. After breakfast, consisting of a slice But, miracle of miracles, the same of moldy bread, a tiny piece of mar- afternoon, a delegation of the garine and brown water known as ersatz coffee," we returned to our bar- International Red Cross came to the camp. We welcomed them with open rack to get some extra sleep. arms because they brought us the sha- Suddenly, we noticed Chaim the Rabbi standing in the snow and shout- lach manot the "Rabbi" promised. Each one of us received a parcel, con- ing, "Haman to the gallows! Haman taining a tin of sweetened condensed to the gallows!" milk, a small bar of chocolate, a box of On his head he had a paper crown sugar cubes and a pack of cigarettes. made of a cement sack, and he was Here we were starving to death draped in a blanket that had cut out when suddenly, on Purim, we received stars from the same paper attached to it. these heavenly gifts. Since then, we We stood like petrified before this never doubted the "Rabbi" anymore. strange apparition, barely able to trust His prediction also came true. Two our eyes, while he performed a dance in the snow, singing: "I am Achashwerosch, months later, Haman-Hitler went to the gallows and shot himself in Berlin, Achashwerosh, the king of the Persians." while we, those of us who were still Then he stood still straightened him- alive, were rescued by the American self out, chin pointed to the sky, his army on May 2, 1945. right arm extended in an imperial ges- I lost track of the "Rabbi" on our ture. and shouted: "Haman to the gal- death march from Dachau to Tyrol, Solly Ganor worked as a slave laborer in lows! Haman to the gallows! Arid when the Outer Camp of Dachau No. 10. Royal I say Haman to the gallows, we all know but I hope that he survived and had many children as he always wanted. Oak resident Caroline Broida Trapp stag which Haman we are talking about!" I always remember him when Purim now, there were about 50 of us stand- about him was published in the book comes around, for the unforgettable ing g'a'ping at the "Rabbi," when he said: "Chicken Soup for America." Ganor e- Purim Shpiel in Dachau. "Yiidden wos iz mit ajch! Haint is Purim, mail address is solganor@netvision.net.il Herzelia Pituach, Israel arch, 1945. They arrived from Auschwitz in several groups. Each group counted about 20 people. Of course, they didn't look like peo- ple. They looked more like walking skeletons. They had triangular faces with pointed chins, and sunken cheeks. Even the lips had shrunken to thin blue lines. The only prominent features were their eyes; they were unusually large and with a strange sheen, almost luminous. They were known in concentration camp slang, as "Musselman." That was usually the last stage before death. They spoke Yiddish with an accent, which to us Lithuanian Jews sounded strange. They told us that they came from the ghetto of Lodz through Auschwitz, before they were sent to our camp. Our camp was known as the Outer Camp of Dachau No. 10; it was situated in the middle of a small forest near the pictur- esque town of Utting, by Lake Amersee. I remember the day when we were brought there, I thought to myself, "How can anything bad happen to us among all this beauty?" I soon found out that the beauty was in the land- scape only. The Germans in charge of us were sadists and murderers. The Lodz people fell into the same deceptive trap. They thought that after Auschwitz, our camp looked like para- dise. Most of them died soon after their arrival, from hard labor, beatings and starvation; still they preferred to die here than in the gas chambers of Auschwitz. Some of them told us that they were standing naked before the gas chambers when they were suddenly ordered to get dressed and were sent to our camp. One of them was known as "Chaim " . ❑ ONLY 10 AM -55 PM 6659 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD OLD ORCHARD MALL S.E. CORNER OF ORCHARD LAKE ROAD & MAPLE ROAD 2.48 626 4484 ..,JAIVIES, DESIGNS NEALE STONE PUNIE ,JEWEBLIRY 3/21 2003 40 FREE GIFT WRAPPING LIBERAL REFUND POLICY COME SEE THE JEWELRY DOCTOR BESSER from page 39 the mainstream churches represent a clear majority in this country. And it's a problem because the Jewish community still has much in common with these groups; aside from Israel, including shared values on issues such as civil and women's rights, church- state separation and social welfare. That's a sharp contrast to the religious right, a bitter adversary to most Jewish groups on those close-to-home issues. And, truth be told, most American Jews are much more moderate in their Mideast positions than the Evangelicals, many of whom support settlements, oppose all land-for-peace negotiations and believe endless Mideast violence is a necessary precur- sor to the return of their Messiah. Mainstream Episcopalians may be foolishly ready to confer sainthood on Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, but at least they aren't cheerleaders for the "end-time" battles that the Evangelicals believe will destroy all but a remnant of the Jewish people. In fact, Jews are conceding the inter- group playing field to the Israel haters when it comes to the mainstream Protestants and Catholics. So one shouldn't be surprised when a Jim Moran makes an outrageously anti-Semitic statement in a main- stream church— and is met only with silence from parishioners who may share Moran's sentiments, or simply may not have heard the truth from their Jewish neighbors. With more Morans crawling out of the woodwork in these feverish times, we need more outreach with both groups of Christians, even when that outreach is difficult and frustrating. ❑